Roman Totenberg's daughter, Nina Totenberg |
Renowned violinist
Roman Totenberg left his beloved Stradivarius in his office while greeting
well-wishers after a concert in 1980. When he returned, it was gone. Its case was later
found in the basement of the Longy School of Music in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
where he taught. But Totenberg, who died three years ago at age 101, never saw
the instrument again. Totenberg
thought he knew who stole the violin, but there was never enough evidence to
pursue a suspect.
The
trail went cold until this June, when his eldest daughter, Nina Totenberg, got
a phone call from an FBI agent.
The
Associated Press report continues:
The
agent said he was looking at the violin, which was in federal custody.
"I
really could hardly believe it at the time," Nina Totenberg, the legal
affairs correspondent for NPR, told The Associated Press in an exclusive
interview Wednesday. "I said, 'I have to call my sisters. I'll tell them
not to get their hopes up,' but he said, 'You don't have to do that. This is
the violin.'"
The
violin, known as the Ames Stradivarius, was made in Italy in 1734 by Antonio
Stradivari and is one of several hundred Stradivarius instruments known to
exist. They can fetch millions of dollars at auction, including a record US$15.9
million in 2011.
Concert
violinist and influential teacher Roman Totenberg at his Newton, Mass. home in
2010. (Bill Greene/Globe Staff/The Boston Globe)
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Authorities
were set to announce details of the recovery Thursday at the U.S. attorney's
office in Manhattan.
Nina
Totenberg said the violin surfaced in June when a woman had it appraised in New
York and the appraiser immediately contacted authorities. The woman is the
former wife of Philip S. Johnson, who died in California in 2011. She declined
to comment to The Associated Press and asked that her name not be published.
She has not been accused of any wrongdoing.
Johnson's
obituary described him as "a noted violinist of 40 years" but did not
detail where or for whom he played. Totenberg said he was an aspiring violinist
seen around her father's office at the time of the theft.
Totenberg
said that, lacking evidence, police weren't able to obtain a warrant to search
for the Stradivarius.
"There
was nothing to be done, and eventually he just moved on and bought another
violin and lived the rest of his life," she said.
A
child prodigy in his native Poland, Roman Totenberg bought the Stradivarius in
1943 for US$15,000 — more than US$200,000 in today's dollars — and it was the only
instrument he performed with until it was stolen. He kept performing into his
90s and taught at Boston University until he died.
"This
loss for my father was, as he said when it happened, it was like losing an
arm," said daughter Jill Totenberg, a public relations executive in New
York. "To have it come back, three years after he died, to us, it's like
having him come alive again."
The
story of its theft and recovery is not uncommon for Stradivarius instruments,
which are virtually impossible to sell on the black market, said David
Schoenbaum, a retired history professor and violin expert who wrote a book
called "The Violin."
"The
things are very valuable, they're very portable and they are appealing,
tempting to steal, and there are famous cases of violins that were stolen and
remained stolen for many years," Schoenbaum said. "It's terribly hard
to get rid of one. The whole world is on your tail, and if you go to a pawn
shop, you'll get US$35. You'd have to take it to a dealer, and the dealer would
immediately call the cops."
Another
famous Stradivarius, the Gibson, was stolen in 1936, and the thief, a
journeyman violinist, confessed on his deathbed in 1985. It's now owned by
violinist Joshua Bell.
A
Stradivarius violin belonging to Erika Morini was stolen from her apartment in
1995 by someone who had a key to the locked bedroom closet where she kept it.
Morini wasn't told about the theft before she died weeks later. The instrument
has never been found.
The
Lipinsky Stradivarius, shown here shortly after recovery, is 300 years old and
valued at more than US$5 million.
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The
Ames Stradivarius had wear-and-tear that indicated it hadn't been
professionally maintained, but it was in pretty good shape overall, suggesting
it hadn't been played much, Nina Totenberg said.
Prosecutors
don't plan to charge anyone in connection with the theft, Totenberg said, and
the violin will be returned to the family. They plan to sell it, but not to a
collector, she said.
"I'm
just glad that the violin, once it's restored to its full potential again, will
eventually be in the hands of another great artist," she said, "and
its gorgeous voice will be heard in concert halls around the country."
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